Eldridge Street Synagogue Eddie Cantor's Birthplace Manhattan Bridge Excelsior Engine Company 9 Firehouse Vanessas Dumplings Hua Du Dumpling Shop Prosperity Dumpling C & L Dumpling House
Samuel F O'Reilly's Tattoo Shop Edward Mooney House Bulls Head Inn Wolfert Webber’s Tavern Shearith Israel's 2nd Cemetery The Dump McKeon's Saloon The Morgue Old Tree House The Farmers Inn Branch Hotel Atlantic Gardens Black Horse Inn Owney Geoghegan's Burnt Rag Al's Bar Steve Brodie's Bar The Pig and Whistle Tavern Hauser Beer Garden Upper Bull's Head DeLancey Arms Dog and Duck Tavern Comanche Club The Fleabag Sailors Snug Harbor The Mug The Duck and the Frying Pan Tavern The Gotham Inn Volksgarten Beer Hall McGurk's Suicide Hall Palace Bar Great Gildersleeves Paresis Hall / Columbia Hall Bowery Theatre Volks Garten Music Hall London Theatre Bowery Concert Hall Bouwerie Lane Theatre Big Tim Sullivan's Clubhouse Zoological Institute Catiemuts Castle / Indian Lookout / Jasper's Windmill P.T. Barnum's First Exhibition Space The Church of St. James Alfred E Smith Home Chinese Food Fried Dumplings
Chatham Theatre Tea Water Pump Kissing Bridge Five Points Whyó Gang Columbus Park Murderers Alley Bottle Alley Ragpickers Row Bandits Roost Pete Williams Place Old Brewery (Coulter's Brewery) Cow Bay Rosanna Peers Grog Shop African Methodist Episcopal Church Collect Pond Fried Dumpling Tasty Dumpling
Civic Fame Statue Rhinelander Sugar House Memorial St. Andrew's Church African American Burial Ground Aaron Burr's Law Office Chambers Street Wall Hall of Records Rotunda Manhattan Company City Hall Park Almshouse New York Institution Palmo Opera House Emigrant Industrial Savings Bank Tweed Courthouse
City Hall Park Soldier's Upper Barracks Bridewell Debtors Prison Dugdale and Searle's Rope Walk Jan de Wit and Denys Hartogveldt's Windmill Brom Martling's Tavern Company Farmhouse Astor House Hotel American Hotel Tiffany & Company Bixby's Hotel Liberty Tree / Liberty Pole De La Montagne's Tavern The Third City Hall Peale's Museum Alfred Ely Beach's Pneumatic Subway Barden's Tavern First NYC Sidewalks A.T. Stewart's Marble Palace Broadway-Chambers Building Irving House Hotel Washington Hotel Bread and Cheese Club Carlton House White Conduit House Byram’s Garden / Mount Vernon Garden New York Garden Christopher Colles' 1st Log Pipeline
Unitarian Church Chambers Street Savings Bank Zion African Methodist Episcopal Church Italian Opera House / National Theatre Hudson Terminal Tom Riley's Liberty Pole
Vauxhall Gardens Bear Market Canvas Town / Topsail Town / Fire of 1776 Washington Market Comfort's Tea Water John Hughson's Tavern Bogardus Building West Street Building
Brooklyn Bridge Horace Greeley Statue New Gaol Mould Fountain City Hall Post Office Woolworth Building St Paul's Church Loew's Bridge Barnum's American Museum Hampden Hall Park Theatre Windust's Restaurant Scudder's Museum Ah Ken's Cigar Stand Mercantile Library Brick Presbyterian Church Tammany Museum Monkey Hill The Lantern Club New York Eye Infirmary Beekman Street Clinton Hotel Pewter Mug
Beekman's Swamp Black Ball Line Pier Cornelius Dircksen's Ferry Walton House Harper and Brothers Washington's 1st Presidential Mansion Cow Foots Hill Samuel Leggett's House
The 92-acre Battery Park City was created from 25 acres of landfill dug out to make room for the former World Trade Center Towers and from sand dredged out of New York Harbor off Staten Island. The 8-million-sq.-ft. World Financial Center took six years to build. The four granite and glass towers are topped by copper domes. Built on a landfill where the famous free version of the No Nukes Concert took place, it now offers live music in its Winter Garden complete with palm trees. The World Financial Center is the world headquarters of Merrill Lynch and American Express.
Irish Hunger Memorial
Vesey Street at North End Avenue
(40.715094, -74.016451)
The Irish Hunger Memorial commemorating and raising awareness of the Great Irish Famine (1845-1852) was dedicated July 16th, 2002. Sculptor Brian Tolle built the memorial to a million victims to look like a fieldstone cottage on a hilly Irish farm, bringing it over in pieces from Ireland. Each stone on the slope is from one of Ireland's 32 counties. Landscape architect Gail Wittwer-Laird added grasses, plants and wildflowers to the project, located on a quarter-acre site at the NW corner of Vesey Street and North End Avenue in Battery Park City. This historic sculpture was completed for $5 million.
Gateway Plaza
345 to 395 South End Avenue
(40.711158, -74.017167)
The six apartment houses that make up Gateway Plaza (the only building in Battery Park City not designed under the Master Plan) was the first building and first 1,712 units built there. Created by Jack Brown and Irving E. Gershon, Gateway Plaza was begun in 1982 and finished in 1983 -- and fully occupied by the end of the year. The first person living in these three 34-story buildings was Brian Babbit, and he is still there with his wife, Jackie. Gateway Plaza was badly damaged during 9-11, and the complex was closed for many months.